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How to Stand up to a Dictator

door Maria Ressa

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1023267,236 (4.25)12
From the recipient of the 2021 Nobel Peace Prize, an impassioned and inspiring memoir of a career spent holding power to account. Maria Ressa is one of the most renowned international journalists of our time. For decades, she challenged corruption and malfeasance in her native country, the Philippines, on its rocky path from an authoritarian state to a democracy. As a reporter from CNN, she transformed news coverage in her region, which led her in 2012 to create a new and innovative online news organization, Rappler. Harnessing the emerging power of social media, Rapplercrowdsourced breaking news, found pivotal sources and tips, harnessed collective action for climate change, and helped increase voter knowledge and participation in elections. But by their fifth year of existence, Rappler had gone from being lauded for its ideas to being targeted by the new Philippine government, and made Ressa an enemy of her country's most powerful man: President Duterte. Still, she did not let up, tracking government seeded disinformation networks which spread lies to its own citizens laced with anger and hate. Hounded by the state and its allies using the legal system to silence her, accused of numerous crimes, and charged with cyberlibel for which she was found guilty, Ressa faces years in prison and thousands in fines. There is another adversary Ressa is battling. How to Stand Up to a Dictator is also the story of how the creep towards authoritarianism, in the Phillipines and around the world, has been aided and abetted by the social media companies. Ressa exposes how they have allowed their platforms to spread a virus of lies that infect each of us, pitting us against one another, igniting, even creating, our fears, anger, and hate, and how this has accelerated the rise of authoritarians and dictators around the world. She maps a network of disinformation-a heinous web of cause and effect-that has netted the globe: from Duterte's drug wars to America's Capitol Hill, Britain's Brexit to Russian and Chinese cyber-warfare, Facebook and Silicon Valley to our own clicks and votes. Democracy is fragile. How to Stand Up to a Dictator is an urgent cry for Western readers to recognize and understand the dangers to our freedoms before it is too late. It is a book for anyone who might take democracy for granted, written by someone who never would. And in telling her dramatic and turbulent and courageous story, Ressa forces readers to ask themselves the same question she and her colleagues ask every day: What are you willing to sacrifice for the truth?… (meer)
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"We are laughing at memes and forgetting our history." ( )
  lneukirch | Feb 4, 2024 |
Maria Ressa was born in the Philippines, but as a girl emigrated with her mother to the U.S. After attending Princeton, she received a Fulbright scholarship to study the effects of theater on Philippine politics.

There she discovered her passion for news and politics and worked her way up to the CNN bureau chief in Manilla.

As she says “The more I reported, the more I could see how every major al-Qaeda plot from 1993 to 2003 had some link to the Philippines, the United States’ former colony, from the attack on the World Trade Center in 1993 to the 1998 bombings of US embassies in East Africa to the JW Marriott Hotel attack in Jakarta in 2003.”p 76

She was intrigued by the emergence of social media and saw that it could be a force for good – spreading factual news information at lightning speed. Unfortunately, the converse was also true:

The two biggest stories of my career had to do with the Philippines as the testing ground of two menaces threatening the United States and the world in the Twenty first century: Islamic terrorism and information warfare on social media.” P 76

“Later I would learn how extremism and radicalization could spread through social networks like a virus. Social network theory offered the Three Degrees of Influence Rule, a theory first posited by Nicholas Christakis and James Fowler in 2007. Their work showed that everything we say or do ripples through our social network, creating an impact on our friends (one degree), our friends’ friends (two degrees) and even our friends’ friends’ friends (three degrees). If you’re feeling lonely,(which you might assume spreads the least), there’s a 25 percent chance that your friend’s friend will feel lonely and a 15 percent chance that your friend’s friend’s friend will feel lonely. Emotions such as happiness and hope, as well as smoking, sexual diseases, and even obesity, can be traced and spread through social networks.”
P77

She and three fellow women journalists started an internet news platform called Rappler in 2012. It won multiple journalism awards but soon became the target of President Rodrigo Duterte known for his extremely brutal regime. Rappler, Ressa and the journalists working there became the targets of harassment, threats, and arrest. Ressa wrote “For me, it’s about two things: abuse of power and the weaponization of the law,” I told the assembled reporters. …..”This isn’t just about me, and it’s not just about Rappler. The message that the government is sending is very clear and someone actually told our reporter this last night: ‘Be silent, or you’re next!” p201

“I guess to a lying government, a journalist is a terrorist, setting off bombs that blow up their lies.” P 206

Ressa was included in Time Magazine’s 2018 Person of the Year; she won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2021.

This is an articulate and yes, scary, memoir. Tactics such as declaring journalists enemies of the people and labeling verifiable facts as ;fake news’ are prominent tactics in many countries where democracy is being undermined. Sadly, they are not uncommon tactics in the US today. ( )
  streamsong | Oct 4, 2023 |
The book's title is misleading, and this is my first gripe with the book. I appreciate Maria Ressa's struggle against autocracy in the Philippines. Also, I appreciate her relentless fight against dictatorship.

The book is an autobiography and does not offer clues on how to stand up to a dictator. How can a journalist or citizen combat oppression without influential contacts?? She does not offer a clue, or any lessons, towards this end,

Once again, I respect her courage and her story. But the book does not fulfil the promise of the title. Her life story is inspiring, but her book does not inspire or educate. ( )
  RajivC | Jul 15, 2023 |
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From the recipient of the 2021 Nobel Peace Prize, an impassioned and inspiring memoir of a career spent holding power to account. Maria Ressa is one of the most renowned international journalists of our time. For decades, she challenged corruption and malfeasance in her native country, the Philippines, on its rocky path from an authoritarian state to a democracy. As a reporter from CNN, she transformed news coverage in her region, which led her in 2012 to create a new and innovative online news organization, Rappler. Harnessing the emerging power of social media, Rapplercrowdsourced breaking news, found pivotal sources and tips, harnessed collective action for climate change, and helped increase voter knowledge and participation in elections. But by their fifth year of existence, Rappler had gone from being lauded for its ideas to being targeted by the new Philippine government, and made Ressa an enemy of her country's most powerful man: President Duterte. Still, she did not let up, tracking government seeded disinformation networks which spread lies to its own citizens laced with anger and hate. Hounded by the state and its allies using the legal system to silence her, accused of numerous crimes, and charged with cyberlibel for which she was found guilty, Ressa faces years in prison and thousands in fines. There is another adversary Ressa is battling. How to Stand Up to a Dictator is also the story of how the creep towards authoritarianism, in the Phillipines and around the world, has been aided and abetted by the social media companies. Ressa exposes how they have allowed their platforms to spread a virus of lies that infect each of us, pitting us against one another, igniting, even creating, our fears, anger, and hate, and how this has accelerated the rise of authoritarians and dictators around the world. She maps a network of disinformation-a heinous web of cause and effect-that has netted the globe: from Duterte's drug wars to America's Capitol Hill, Britain's Brexit to Russian and Chinese cyber-warfare, Facebook and Silicon Valley to our own clicks and votes. Democracy is fragile. How to Stand Up to a Dictator is an urgent cry for Western readers to recognize and understand the dangers to our freedoms before it is too late. It is a book for anyone who might take democracy for granted, written by someone who never would. And in telling her dramatic and turbulent and courageous story, Ressa forces readers to ask themselves the same question she and her colleagues ask every day: What are you willing to sacrifice for the truth?

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